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IFRS 4 Phase II Insurance Contracts (Exposure Draft)

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Title: IFRS 4 Phase II Insurance Contracts (Exposure Draft)


1
IFRS 4 Phase IIInsurance Contracts(Exposure
Draft)
2
History
  • IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts
  • started in 1997
  • standard issued in 2004 (Phase I)
  • aimed at making only limited improvements
  • Discussion Paper Preliminary Views on Insurance
    Contracts (Phase II)
  • issued in 2007
  • further discussed since early 2008
  • 162 comment letters received

3
Why IFRS 4 Phase II?
  • IFRS 4 (Phase I) temporary solution
  • Wide variety of
  • accounting practices for different contract types
    and jurisdictions
  • measurement models
  • lack of comparability and transparency
  • current insurance accounting does not provide
    users with relevant information

Insurance accounting TODAY is a black box
4
Unbundling
  • Unbundling
  • Account for components of a contract as if they
    were separate contracts
  • Unbundle components of an insurance contract that
    arenot closely related to the insurance coverage
  • Most common examples
  • Policyholder account balances
  • Embedded derivatives
  • Goods and services that are not closely related
    to insurance
  • Not permitted otherwise

5
Measurement - Building blocks
  • Building blocks
  • Expected (probability-weighted) future
    incremental cash flows (that arise from the
    contract)
  • Time value of money
  • Risk adjustment
  • No day one gains residual margin
  • Day one losses recognised in profit or loss

Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
6
Measurement - Building blocks
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
  • Expected (probability-weighted) future
    incremental cash flows
  • current estimates
  • on a portfolio level
  • expected to arise from the contract, including
  • incremental acquisition costs
  • cash flows arising from participating features

7
Measurement - Building blocks continued
  • Acquisition costs
  • Costs of selling, underwriting and initiating an
    insurance contract
  • Some insurers currently defer all acquisition
    costs
  • Proposal in the ED
  • incremental acquisition costs (on a contract
    level)are included in the cash flows
  • non-incremental acquisition costs are expensed

Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
8
Measurement - Building blocks
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
  • Participating contracts
  • Cash flows from participating features
  • (incremental) participating benefits an insurer
    expects to pay arising from participating
    insurance contracts
  • ? Contract cash flows like any other
  • Mutual insurers?

9
Measurement - Building blocks continued
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
  • Time value of money
  • Discount rate
  • Reflecting characteristics of the insurance
    contract
  • Non-participating risk-free plus adjustment for
    illiquidity
  • Participating consider performance of assets
  • Excluded non-performance risk

10
Measurement - Building blocks continued
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
  • Risk adjustment
  • Explicitly measures the effects of uncertainty
    associated with future cash flows
  • insurers view of uncertainty
  • Re-measured each reporting period
  • Measured at portfolio level
  • Permitted measurement techniques

Confidence interval/ Conditional Tail
Expectation/ Cost of Capital
11
Measurement - Building blocks continued
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
  • Residual margin
  • Allocation of day-one gain - releasing it to
    profit or loss over the coverage period in a
    systemic way
  • passage of time, or
  • pattern that better reflects the occurrence of
    benefits and claims
  • Day-one loss exists when cash inflows lt cash
    outflows risk adjustment
  • Accretion of interest (locked-in)

Expected claim payments 10
lt
Premium received 12
Risk adjustment 3
12
Measurement - Building blocks continued
Cash flows
Discounting
Risk adjustment
Margin
premium
residualmargin
Margins
compositemargin
Twoapproachesconsidered
riskadjustment
cash outflows
cash outflows
13
Measurement modelPerformance reporting
Liabilityat startof year
Liabilityat endof year
Changes in the liability
Cash
Items in profit or loss
Cash
20
- 5
- 3
1
2
14
- 1
expectedcashflows
releaseof residualmargin
releasefromrisk
interestonliability
unexpectedcash flows
-1 3 1
-2
1
Effect in profit or loss
14
Presentation and disclosures
  • Presentation of income statement
  • Margin-based approach
  • follows the direct measurement model
  • treating insurance premiums as deposits
  • broadly showing
  • change in the risk adjustment and the release of
    the residual margin
  • what insurers expect to earn from providing
    insurance services and investment return
  • gross inflows and outflows (premiums, claims and
    benefits) in disclosures

15
Presentation and disclosures continued
Inception six months six months
1 Jan to 30 Jun to 31 Dec
Risk margin 21 26
Residual margin 2 2
Insurance margin 0 23 28
Experience adjustment   (10) (10)
Changes in estimates   (20) 0
Net gain at inception 0 0 0
Investment income 40 38
Interest on insurance liability (25) (23)
Net interest and investment 0 15 15
Profit 0 8 33
  • Presentation Example

16
Presentation and disclosures continued
  • Disclosures
  • Disclosure principle aims at
  • explaining the amounts recognized in the
    financial statements arising from insurance
    contracts and
  • the nature and extent of risks arising from those
    contracts.
  • Auditable information about effectiveness in risk
    management practices (vs. non-audited MDA info)
  • Risk disclosures similar to IFRS 7
  • Sensitivity analysis

17
Advantages of the proposed model
  • Principles not detailed guidance
  • Comparability global standard, consistent
    accounting
  • Coherent framework to deal with
  • more complex contracts
  • emerging issues (no need for add on rules)

18
Advantages of the proposed model continued
  • Relevant information for users
  • focus on drivers of profitability of insurance
    contracts
  • amount, timing and uncertainty of future cash
    flows
  • current estimates
  • income recognised in line with release from risk
  • eliminate accounting mismatches
  • consistent accounting for embedded options and
    guarantees

19
Thank you (above slides are prepared based on
IASB 2010.8.12 Taipei seminar materials)
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